orwell

OCDG: Several themes in this story… the usual self-aggrandizement abounds but two others that intertwine. The subject of assimilation and the kosher mafia-like “you’re in it for life” deal. The control the rabbis exert in keeping the jews from wandering too far and becoming too intermixed with the indigenous culture. The jews always boast how well they are assimilated in every nation they inhabit but the tell tale signs give away the game. In their minds they think they’re like everyone else but they put as much or more effort in keeping their distance and making sure they’re different. This is yet another aspect of their collective insanity.

JNS

It seems the celebration of the holiday is related to the competition with a commercialized, publicly observed Christmas and holiday season

In the 21st century, Hanukkah is celebrated by more Jews than any holiday other than Passover. Both are performed at least one night a year by almost 90 percent of American Jews, more than the number who observed Hanukkah in the 1930s. The sociological reason is surely related the competition with a commercialized, publicly observed Christmas and holiday season.

Yet Jews could have also adopted a secularized Christmas, as many German Jews did in the 19th century and early 20th century. If social pressure and a desire to be like everyone else and make sure children are not left out were the only reasons, then one need not enhance a separate Jewish holiday that highlights the very difference that makes many American Jews uncomfortable. There was also counter-pressure to assert one’s ethnic and religious identity against the majority. Thus, whatever the social reasons for Hanukkah, Jewish educators developed an ideological rationale that became very popular.

Reform and Conservative Jews led the way in this Americanization of Hanukkah, not only by inventing the custom of giving eight gifts, one per night, and using colored candles, unknown beyond its shores, but also by reshaping the message of the menorah’s light to fit the American Jewish predicament.

The Reform reinvention was striking, because there are elements in Hanukkah that could be difficult for classical Reform Jews to adopt. For the Maccabees, Hanukkah is celebrated as the rededication of the altar desecrated by the Greek Syrians who sacrificed pigs on that altar to Zeus, but Reform Jews do not pray to return to sacrifices and to rebuild the Temple in Jerusalem.

The Maccabees fought to achieve political independence for a separate Jewish nation in the Jewish homeland by trying to expel Western culture (Hellenism) by acts of military heroism. But classical Reform Judaism was non-nationalist, anti-Zionist, pacifist in orientation, and committed to integration within Western civilization in their own lands.

Mattathias killed a Jew who publicly worshipped Zeus when Antiochus’s men came to enlist supporters, and Judah the Maccabee forcibly circumcised Jewish babies when their parents wanted to be more Hellenized or were simply afraid of reprisals by the Greek Syrians. In contrast, freedom of conscience, faith in God, loyalty to the state, and an ethics of peace and reason have been central Reform values.

Thus, it should not be surprising that Isaac M. Wise, who introduced Reform Judaism in the United States, suggested in 1865 the elimination of the Hanukkah lights. But six years later, the Augsburg Synod, with delegates mostly from German Reform congregations, introduced a resolution urging the appropriate commemoration of Hanukkah, which had been neglected in many Reform Jewish congregations and schools. The rationale for this resolution was to counteract the celebration of Christmas by many Jewish families “in direct opposition to Jewish consciousness.”

One hundred and fifty years later, American Jews continue to give great significance to Hanukkah as a counterweight to Christmas. But they have also made Hanukkah a major symbol of America Jewish values. A 1971 Reform curriculum for children written by Harry Gersh said Hanukkah was “the first for the right of a people within a country to believe as they wish—so long as they followed the king’s law in worldly matters. For thousands of years, Jews have lived under kings, princes, dukes, caliphs, governors, presidents. And they have always been loyal to these rulers—so long as they were permitted to practice their own religion. This idea of religious freedom is followed in all free nations today. It was first given to the world by the Jews.”

The battle of the Maccabees against the religious and political coercion of Antiochus was a battle for collective religious, hence national political freedom, but not for individual freedom of conscience as such. Yet the Reform interpretation is certainly as valid as any rabbinic reading of the past, and it makes Hanukkah central to the American Jewish concern for maintaining its difference within a democratic land.

Reform Jews have become, at least since the Holocaust, strong supporters of Zionism. And so nowadays, Hanukkah can also represent for them, as it does for Israelis, a war of independence and a model for the virtue of military courage in a just war. Still, some liberal Reform Jews, especially during the protests against the War in Vietnam, have felt ambivalent about militant nationalism. But I think it is still true to say that liberal American Jews hold that Hanukkah candles represent a value that they are proud to propagate in the public sphere: the banner of religious freedom for every individual.

This is the central value for American liberal Jews and for liberal Americans, and that bridges the tension between Jewish and American identity, so the Jews need not feel so uncomfortable with being different. This rationale is as important as the eight presents.

0 thoughts on “How American Jews Made Hanukkah the Holiday of Religious Freedom”
  1. Every religion has to fight to keep its flock from drifting away. By 1930 the German Jews were all but assimilated in Germany…and soon would be a sheep of another religion…Consequently the fanatical Zionists who controlled less than 5% of the Jews in Germany in 1925 came up with the most cunning trick … They financed Hitler from being destroyed by the communists and then again by his being destroyed by the world wide Jewish boycott of all German goods and services in 1933 knowing full well that Hitler would help them drive the Jews, even the assimilated ones , out of Germany and into Israel. Great plan. It was called the Transfer Agreement. It worked. Unfortunately many Jews died in the process of disease and starvation in the then starving, diseased filled Polish and German camps as the war came to an end. And the Zionists used this to their advantage also by greatly exaggerating the Holocaust to be the greatest tragedy of the war.

    But the Zionists got their Israel. And true to form, they have turned into monsters just like their Bolsheviks and Communists brethren before them in their destruction of the Palestinians and anyone else who opposes them.. So today the Jews no longer actually follow Judaism as much as they are non religious, atheist Zionists who”worship” the Holocaust. But they have their Israel. Hanukkah serves two purposes. It fools the Christians into thinking the Jews are just like they. They too have a Xmas holiday. And , as you state, it helps prevent the assimilation and the alienation of the Jews world wide, particularly in America.

  2. Unfortunately, the jews have never followed God’s religion, that’s why they have the history that they do and why they were permanently exiled, physically and spiritually.

    Even the best of the jews are in rebellion against God, in more ways than one.

    In Weimar Germany, the “assimilated” jews turned that society into a sewer as well. Prostitution was extremely prevalent, drugs, abortion, and every other wickedness also.

    Something in the nature of the jews, something not just passed down through their sick beliefs and traditions/rituals but also in their DNA. The new understanding of gene expression, called epigenetics, helps explain why this is so. Behavior and external stimuli shape not only our psychological world but also our physical bodies… these switched on/off genes are then passed down to the next generation.

    As the jews sow, thus they shall reap.

  3. Ah, yes. It’s that time of year again. In Detroit, Chabad Lubavitch is going to light a giant 26-foot-tall menorah downtown with a 2-hour festival complete with food and music. Their rabbi says that the festival celebrates the “freedom to be Jewish” and that “we should never have to deny our identity. We can celebrate who we are.” He also says that “many Jews use the time to spread more light to the world through their actions.” In other words, we’re supposed to forget about Israel’s barbaric bloodsport in Gaza last summer and focus instead on potato pancakes and dreidels. Makes me want to puke!

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